A Baylor University regent condemned female students at a party as "perverted little tarts" in emails documented in the Title IX lawsuit filed against the school by 10 women who reported being sexually assaulted while attending school there.

The emails, sent to a faculty adviser, are included in documents filed as part of the women's lawsuit. The suit doesn't say whether any of the women Jones condemned are among the anonymous plaintiffs, the Tribune-Herald said.

The regent's emails did say he suspected the students at the party of underage drinking. The women who sued Baylor allege the university used its policy against student drinking "as a pretext to shame, silence and threaten to expel a female student."

Jones, a former Hill County prosecutor and state representative, served on Baylor's Board of Regents from 2003 to 2013.

According to the Tribune-Herald, Jones included in his emails photos of Baylor students at a party where he believed alcohol was being served to underage students and prospective members of a Greek organization.

"I am an old district attorney and will produce more evidence if I need to," Jones wrote. "Please don't make me. All of this should be sufficient. ... I would take this one to trial and would win it outright."

But Tommye Lou Davis, to whom Jones sent the emails, said none of the students in the photos were underage. Davis, an associate dean at the time, was the faculty adviser for the Greek organization and said the party was held to celebrate an engagement.

Jones was also part of a recent lawsuit that accused him of of influencing current regents' personnel decisions amid the school's sexual assault scandal, which includes several Title IX lawsuits in addition to the one filed by the 10 women.

An investigation by the Pepper Hamilton law firm found 17 people had reported sexual or physical assault by 19 football players, including four gang rapes, since 2011.

But another estimate, from a lawsuit filed in May, says as many as 31 players committed 52 acts of rape from 2011 to 2014.

In that suit, a former Baylor student and volleyball player alleges she was drugged and gang-raped by as many as eight football players at a 2012 party.

The lawsuit, which did not identify the victim or any of the football players, alleges the school's football culture had "run wild."

"Under [former football coach Art] Briles, the culture of Baylor football and rape became synonymous," the lawsuit filed in May says.